ϴ

Skip to main content
Home

Ideas + Action for a Better City

 Join SPUR
a member-supported nonprofit organization

Main Menu

  • ϴ
    • Our Mission
    • Equity Platform
    • Staff
    • Contact Us
    • Board of Directors
    • Work or Volunteer
    • Impact Stories
    • Annual Reports
    • Financial Statements
    • ϴthe Urban Center
    • Visit the Member Lounge
    • Rent Our Facility
    • Get Our Newsletters
  • Join or Give
    • Individual Membership
    • Business Membership
    • Donate to SPUR
    • Planned Giving
  • Events
    • Events Calendar
    • Exhibitions
    • Silver ϴAwards
    • Ideas + Action
    • Good Government Awards
    • Business Member Events
  • Policy Areas
    • Planning
    • Housing
    • Transportation
    • Sustainability + Resilience
    • Economy
    • Governance
  • Initiatives
    • ϴVoter Guide
    • ϴRegional Strategy
    • Cutting Red Tape
    • Guadalupe River Park
    • Belonging in the Bay
    • Rising Together
    • Ocean Beach Master Plan
    • The Resilient City
  • Regional Strategy
  • Publications
  • Search

Primary tabs

  • General
  • Advanced Publications Search
Publication Type
Topic
Geography
Date Range
Housing in San Francisco

Build More Housing, Faster: Major SPUR-Supported Housing Legislation Becomes Law

News / October 4, 2022
Over the past two weeks, Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law seven pro-housing production bills sponsored and supported by ϴand allied members of our statewide California Home Building Alliance. This capped a very successful year of housing advocacy in the Capitol. We’re thrilled with the results of this legislative session and grateful to our partners in this work.
biking on the bike lane in san jose

Big Win! New SPUR-Sponsored Legislation Will Help California Commit to Sustainable Transportation

News / October 3, 2022
Governments, advocates and businesses already face great challenges in transforming California’s car-oriented transportation system to one that is affordable, equitable and consistent with the state’s climate goals. But it’s even harder when state laws consistently undermine our best efforts. Governor Newsom recently signed three SPUR-sponsored transportation bills that will help affordable and sustainable transportation options succeed by stopping policies and practices that have been undermining their success for decades.
sarah karlinsky

Staff Profile: Sarah Karlinsky, 18-Year Spurrito

News / September 29, 2022
This year, ϴis celebrating staff members — a.k.a. “Spurritos”— who have served the organization for 10 years or more. This month we profile Sarah Karlinsky, SPUR’s senior advisor, who has held five different roles since she first started at the organization in 2005.
SJ taiko drummers

SPUR’s First 10 Years in San José

News / September 28, 2022
This year, ϴcelebrates the 10-year anniversary of its work in San José. To commemorate all we’ve learned and accomplished together, we asked a dozen ϴand South Bay leaders to reflect on what San José was like at the time, what ϴbrought to the city and how both have evolved over the past decade.
report covers

Research Fellows and Interns Make Major Contributions to SPUR’s Work

News / September 27, 2022
During the last two academic years, ϴhas been fortunate to host a talented group of policy researchers through partnerships with graduate school fellowship and practicum programs. Their research has contributed to SPUR’s work, including policy changes and proposed legislation at the regional and state levels. Learn more about the work they’ve done with ϴand what they’ve gone on to do after collaborating with us.
white house

Key ϴFood and Ag Policies Get National Limelight

News / September 27, 2022
After a 50-year hiatus, the White House is hosting its second-ever Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health. In an effort to frame the agenda for the conference, a coalition of organizations has released a report proposing 30 federal policy recommendations. Three of SPUR’s top priorities at the state and local level are among those recommendations, and they are now firmly in the national spotlight as the conference approaches.
Report cover

Gas Appliances and Smog: California's Hidden Air Pollution Problem

Policy Brief September 20, 2022
Gas appliances in California homes and buildings generate four times as much lung-damaging nitrogen oxide (NOx) pollution as the state's gas power plants, and roughly two thirds as much NOx as all of the state’s passenger cars. To meet federal air quality standards that protect health, air quality regulators in California must phase out the sale of gas appliances and implement equity-centered implementation plans for transitioning homes to electric alternatives like heat pumps – which produce no onsite air pollution.
orange skies in SF

The IRA Is Historic, but We Still Need Prop. 30 to Fight Climate Change

News / September 14, 2022
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), signed by President Biden last month, is the largest ever federal investment in fighting climate change . While we as Americans should be taking a victory lap for this momentous achievement, we should not for one moment think that the investments in the IRA are alone sufficient to tackle climate change. To win this generation’s greatest fight, we will need major continued investments at the federal, state and local levels. That’s why ϴis supporting Prop. 30, a measure which would make historic investments in fighting climate change — investments that pay off in the form of fuel cost savings and avoided premature deaths, asthma attacks and cleaner air.

ϴSupports SB 222, A Framework for Statewide Water Affordability Assistance Program

Advocacy Letter September 12, 2022
SB 222 would establish a first in the nation statewide Low-Income Water Rate Assistance Program to ensure that all Californians can access safe drinking water and wastewater services regardless of income. Water bill assistance will provide California a pathway to raise local revenue to adapt water infrastructure to the stresses of climate change without making water unaffordable for low-income customers.

ϴand fellow advocates call on MTC to support and strengthen draft transit-oriented communities policy

Advocacy Letter September 8, 2022
SPUR, Enterprise Community Partners, Transform, and NPH have led a coalition of advocates pushing a bold and equitable regional Transit-Oriented Communities policy. The latest draft would deliver strong residential and commercial growth around the region's transit hubs, while increasing affordability and protecting against displacement. ϴand fellow advocates called for further action to ensure that the policy affirmatively furthers affordable housing, and limits auto-oriented development.

ϴurges Governor to sign bill to make parking cash-out work

Advocacy Letter September 2, 2022
SPUR-sponsored AB2206 clarifies how to determine the amount of cash to which an employee is entitled, making it easier for employees to follow the law and easier for jurisdictions to enforce it. The bill was approved by the legislature and awaits Governor Newsom's signature.
Many buildings in Copenhagen’s historic city center were renovated and redeveloped after Denmark’s near bankruptcy in the 1980s.

Housing for Everyone, the Danish Way

News / August 31, 2022
Over the last 100 years, Denmark has taken structural and local policy implementation approaches to housing that have much to teach the Bay Area. We got to meet leaders in government, architecture, housing and sustainability who shared their insights and fielded our group’s many questions about how the city renewed its urban core without demolition and how it builds two types of housing that we don’t have: social housing and housing co-ops.
bike riders in Copenhagen

How Copenhagen Can Inspire Bay Area Cities to Go Big on Bikes

News / August 31, 2022
Bicycles and bicyclists are among the first things you notice when you arrive in Copenhagen — there’s an endless sea of bikes parked at every major train station plaza and lined up along every building. Though our region has a long way to go, Bay Area cities can take relevant lessons — and inspiration — from Copenhagen’s bicycle planning history, its pragmatic approach and its regional aspirations.
Copenhagen buildings

Finding a Way to Build: Can the Bay Area Learn from Copenhagen’s 1990s Reinvention?

News / August 31, 2022
Comparing 2022 Copenhagen to the Bay Area of 2022 is like comparing apples to oranges. Aside from a few one-offs, most projects in Copenhagen would not be easily transferable to the Bay Area at scale due to foundational differences in the way our governments operate, from the national level on down. What would be more transferable would be to apply the lessons learned in the 1990s-era Copenhagen to the Bay Area in 2022.
Sustainable housing on former industrial land along Copenhagen's Nordhavn (North Harbor) harbor front.

The Sustainable City: Learning from Copenhagen’s Plan for Zero Carbon

News / August 31, 2022
Copenhagen has set a goal to become the world’s first carbon-neutral city by 2025. On our study trip this summer, we learned that the city’s commitment to sustainability is embedded in its long-range land use plans and goes back to the middle of the 20th century. Copenhagen’s success in realizing these plans comes from a strategic combination of investments and partnerships that have made it possible to create urban neighborhoods with mixed-income housing, transit access, bicycle lanes and green infrastructure. Together, all of these efforts contribute to the goal of a zero-carbon city.
ϴUrban center

SPUR’s Plan to Decarbonize the Urban Center

News / August 31, 2022
Sometimes, decarbonizing a building isn’t all that hard, the owners are equipped to shoulder the costs, and obtaining permits is fast and straightforward. Those cases are worth examining, because the state needs early movers to build a robust market for zero-emission technology to bring costs down for others. Enter the ϴUrban Center. Built in 2009 to LEED Silver standards, SPUR’s downtown San Francisco headquarters was designed to be a community gathering space and a symbol of the region’s sustainability values.

ϴSupport for AB 2438

Advocacy Letter August 30, 2022
Even with visionary transportation policies and plans to address the climate crisis, we are finding that our state programs have been slow to adapt. ϴsupports Assembly Bill 2438 (Friedman), because it requires the state to incorporate its climate goals into the transportation programs. AB 2438 will help to develop a transparent and accountable process for how projects are evaluated on safety, accessibility, reliability, and the state’s climate goals.

ϴpushes for a customer-first approach on BART Phase II

Advocacy Letter August 25, 2022
We are deeply invested in the success of BART Phase II, and have spent many hours working with VTA, BART and the City of San Jose on the station refinements task force to ensure the best possible project gets built. We commend the VTA project team, which has taken our concerns seriously and developed new ideas that would, if advanced, improve the project significantly . We strongly recommend making sure this project includes at least two entrances at both the downtown and Diridon stations.

ϴsupports AB2206 to make California's parking cash-out law work

Advocacy Letter August 24, 2022
ϴis sponsoring AB2206, authored by Assemblymember Alex Lee, which clarifies California's parking cash-out law. This law requires that for employees who choose to give-up their parking space and commute without driving a vehicle, qualifying employers must offer the cash equivalent of any parking subsidy that the employer is offering.

ϴsupports San José's Move San José Plan and Transit First Policy

Advocacy Letter August 21, 2022
On August 9th, San José's City Council approved Move San José, a citywide transportation plan that sets forth transportation policies focusing on achieving the City’s safety, equity, and climate goals. The city's Transit First Policy was also approved, ensuring that the city directs efforts toward making transit safer and more useful.

Pagination

  • Show more

Get Our Newsletters  Join SPUR

ϴUrban Center, 654 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA 94105-4015 | (415) 781-8726 | [email protected]

 

© 2025 ϴPrivacy Policy 501(C)(3) Non-Profit Tax Identification: 94-1498232